Fluctuation-dissipation supplemented by nonlinearity: A climate-dependent subgrid-scale parameterization in low-order climate models

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Abstract

Climate-system models use a multitude of parameterization schemes for small-scale processes. These should respond to externally forced climate variability in an appropriate manner so as to reflect the response of the parameterized process to a changing climate. The most attractive route to achieve such a behavior would certainly be provided by theoretical understanding sufficiently deep to enable the a priori design of climate-sensitive parameterization schemes. An alternative path might, however, be helpful when the parameter tuning involved in the development of a scheme is objective enough so that these parameters can be described as functions of the statistics of the climate system. Provided thatthe dynamics of the process in question is sufficiently stochastic, and that the external forcing is not too strong, the fluctuation-dissipation theorem (FDT) might be a tool to predict from the statistics of a system (e.g., the atmosphere) how an objectively tuned parameterization should respond to external forcing (e.g., by anomalous sea surface temperatures). This problem is addressed within the framework of low-order (reduced) models for barotropic flow on the sphere,based on a few optimal basis functions and using an empirical linear subgrid-scale (SGS) closure. A reduced variant of quasi-Gaussian FDT (rqG-FDT) is used to predict the response of the SGS closure to anomalous local vorticity forcing. At sufficiently weak forcing, use of the rqG-FDT is found to systematically improve the agreement between the response of a reduced model and that of a classic spectral code for the solution of the barotropic vorticity equation. © 2013 American Meteorological Society.

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Achatz, U., Löbl, U., Dolaptchiev, S. I., & Gritsun, A. (2013). Fluctuation-dissipation supplemented by nonlinearity: A climate-dependent subgrid-scale parameterization in low-order climate models. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 70(6), 1833–1846. https://doi.org/10.1175/JAS-D-12-0229.1

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